Impact of Antinutritional Factors in Food Proteins on the Digestibility of Protein and the Bioavailability of Amino Acids and on Protein Quality

Oct 31, 2012The British journal of nutrition

How harmful substances in food proteins affect protein digestion, amino acid absorption, and protein quality

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Abstract

Protein digestibility in traditional diets from developing countries is considerably lower than in typical North American diets, with values of 54-78% compared to 88-94%.

  • Dietary antinutritional factors may adversely affect protein digestibility, amino acid bioavailability, and overall protein quality.
  • High levels of trypsin inhibitors from soybeans and other legumes may reduce protein and amino acid digestibility by up to 50% and protein quality by up to 100% in animal studies.
  • Tannins in sorghum and other cereals can lead to significant reductions in protein digestibility by up to 23% in various animal models.
  • Phytates in cereals and legumes can reduce protein digestibility by as much as 10%.
  • D-amino acids and lysinoalanine formed during heat/alkaline treatment of proteins are poorly digestible (less than 40%) and can decrease protein quality by up to 100% in growth studies.
  • Adverse effects of antinutritional factors on protein digestibility are reportedly more pronounced in older rats compared to younger ones.

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